You’ve done the work.
You’ve been featured in places that matter.
You’ve had real conversations on real platforms.
But your Press Page?
It feels more like a list of links than a reason to believe in you.
You’re not alone.
Most people treat their Press Page like a digital trophy shelf.
But it should do more than show where you’ve been.
It should quietly say, “You can trust me.”
Let’s rebuild it with intention.
First, ask yourself: why does this page exist?
It’s not to brag.
It’s to position.
When someone lands here, they’re looking for confirmation.
They’re thinking:
“Is this someone worth listening to?”
“Can I take them seriously?”
“Would others trust them?”
Your job is to answer yes, without needing to say it out loud.
Don’t start with logos. Start with meaning.
Instead of opening the page with a wall of icons, try a single, clear line that sets the tone.
Something like:
▪ “Featured by platforms that value clarity, strategy, and real results.”
▪ “Recognized for helping people grow online without guesswork.”
▪ “Invited to speak about visibility, growth, and building trust at scale.”
This instantly shifts the feeling.
It’s not about quantity.
It’s about intention.
Show the story behind the feature
Anyone can write “As seen in Forbes.”
But what did you talk about?
Why does it matter?
Here’s a better format:
▪ Publication name or platform
▪ Short, relatable title
▪ One line that shows what the feature was about
▪ Link to read, watch, or listen
For example:
Forbes – Positioning Your Brand Without Burnout
A real conversation about growth, clarity, and building trust when you’re not the loudest in the room.
[Read the article]
Now it means something.
Curate instead of cluttering
You don’t need every podcast you’ve ever been on.
Just the ones that move your credibility forward.
Pick a handful that:
▪ Align with your message
▪ Attract the audience you want more of
▪ Reflect your level of authority
Less noise. More weight.
Give people a path to reach you
End with a soft but clear invitation.
Something like:
“Want to collaborate, feature me, or book me for your show? Reach out here.”
Let the right people know you’re open.
And make it easy for them to take the next step.
Final Thought
Your audience doesn’t need to know every place you’ve been seen.
They need to believe that people like them trust you.
And that you’re the real deal.
A Press Page isn’t about ego.
It’s about quiet authority.
Make it feel that way.
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